Beauty Queen Who Lost Miss Delaware Crown Will Keep Scholarship Money

The Delaware beauty queen whose title was revoked after it was revealed she is too old to meet the pageant’s requirements will keep her $9,000 in scholarship money.

Officials with the Miss America Organization confirmed to ABC News today that Amanda Longacre, 24, will still be awarded the scholarship money she won June 14 when she was crowned Miss Delaware, even though she will no longer represent Delaware in September’s Miss America pageant.

Longacre’s crown was revoked Tuesday after national Miss America officials learned that she will turn 25 in October, a violation of the contract pageant officials say Longacre signed prior to the pageant confirming she would not turn 25 before Dec. 31, 2014.

“When the contract arrived in the national office and her birth date arrived we realized a mistake had been made on behalf of the Delaware pageant,” Miss American Chairman and CEO Sam Haskell told ABC News today. “I don’t know how they missed it and I don’t know how she missed it.”

“It breaks my heart that she went through all of this but she is not eligible and we have to honor the rules,” Haskell said.

Brittany Lewis, also 24 and the former Miss Wilmington, who finished first runner-up to Longacre, was crowned Miss Delaware Thursday night at a ceremony in Dover.

Andre Lamar/Dover Post

Brittany Lewis of Wilmington competes during the evening wear phase of the Miss Delaware 2014 pageant in the Rollins Center of Dover Downs Hotel & Casino in Dover, Delaware on June 14, 2014.

Haskell said that Lewis will also get the $9,000 in scholarship money awarded to the Miss Delaware winner, and each additional contestant who placed will also move up a spot and earn the additional scholarship money of the higher place finish.

“Because we are a scholarship organization we’re going to make sure Amanda gets that scholarship and the new Miss Delaware gets the same scholarship,” Haskell said, noting that the Miss Delaware pageant alone distributes over $30,000 in scholarship money each year.

Longacre, who could not be reached today by ABC News, is being told today by Miss Delaware officials that she will keep her scholarship money, according to Haskell, who says he has not spoken to either Longacre or Lewis.

The Miss Delaware website, which previously featured photos of Longacre along with other contestants, is now blank and contains only the message, "The Miss Delaware Website is currently being updated. Please check back soon."

www.missde.org

The Miss Delaware Scholarship Organization website, www.missde.org, showing Amanda Longacre's crowning is seen in a grab made from Google Cache on June 27, 2014.

Haskell says this is the first time in his eight years as CEO of the Miss America Organization that an error such as this has occurred.

“This [the rule that contestants have to remain 24 the entire year in which they compete] is something that has been in effect for years,” Haskell said.

“It’s up to the local and state organizations - and we have thousands and thousands of girls compete each year – to make sure their contestants are eligible,” he said. “We leave that in their hands and only when it comes to us do we get into the specifics and double-check and triple-check.”

“All I can say is that the first-runner-up is going to be a great representative for Delaware.”

The Miss America Organization also announced today that a new winner has been crowned in Florida after pageant officials in that state mistabulated the judges’ scores.

Elizabeth Fechtel, who was crowned Miss Florida 2014 on Saturday, was informed Thursday by pageant officials that she is now first runner-up for Miss Florida 2014.

Victoria Cowen, 21, of Panama City, who finished first runner-up to Fechtel, has now been crowned Miss Florida 2014.

Courtesy Miss America Organization

The newly crowned Miss Florida, Victoria Cowen, is seen in an undated handout photo.

“All states re-verify their results and in a standard checking of ballots the Florida delegation discovered there had been a tabulation error and realized Elizabeth had not won,” Haskell told ABC News. “As uncomfortable as this is, we have to do the right thing."

"There can be no cloud of suspicion over the judging process and the selection of candidates," he said.

Unlike Longacre in Delaware, Fechtel will be eligible to compete again in the Miss Florida pageant because of her age, 21.

“I’ve never known this to happen either,” Haskell said of the re-crowning. “It’s just so uncanny that these two things have happened in the same week.”

The 2014 Miss America pageant will be held Sept. 14 in Atlantic City, N.J., and televised on ABC.